This article reports that a suit was brought against the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners, seeking an injunction against board chairman Stanley Kusper and asking that the Board come under federal control.

Written in the first person, Task Force reporter William Mullen describes how he infiltrated the office of Stanley Kusper, the commissioner of the Board of Election, and uncovered evidence of large scale election fraud.

Although the Tribune's investigation into vote fraud produced a federal grand jury investigation, the Tribune finds that many ineligible voters are still registered to vote in the then upcoming election.

After indicting 40 election judges and poll workers on vote fraud charges, a federal grand jury investigation into Chicago's historic vote fraud subpoenas 15 ward committeemen for their rosters of precinct workers. The investigation is a result of the Tribune's task force report in to the city's vote fraud. This piece is a part of that series.

The Democratic controlled Board of Election Commissioners in Chicago reverses precedent and proposes a fraud check after upcoming elections, in part as a response to a Tribune series on vote fraud in the city.

Part of the Tribune's Task Force Report on vote fraud in Chicago's Board of Election Commissioners. This piece reports on the storage and moving of voting machines and materials which, as the Tribune reports, were entrusted to favored companies instead of competitively bid upon. The companies were paid well above standard rates for their services.